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The Kindly Ones

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This Faustian tale unfolds as the fictional memoir of Dr. Max Aue, a former SS intelligence officer who has reinvented himself as a family man and lace factory owner in post-war France. An intellectual immersed in philosophy, literature, and classical music, Max is also a cold-blooded assassin and a meticulous bureaucrat. He recounts his life with chilling clarity, reflecting on his disrupted childhood, pivotal student experiences, and his involvement in Nazi atrocities across the Eastern Front, from Poland to the Caucasus. Present during the siege of Stalingrad and the death camps, he ultimately witnesses the chaotic downfall of the Nazis and Berlin. While Max is a fictional character, he interacts with historical figures like Eichmann, Himmler, and Hitler. This expansive, intense narrative is both hallucinatory and compelling, earning it the designation of a 'monument of contemporary literature' by Le Figaro. It has drawn comparisons to literary classics such as War and Peace. This profound exploration of the seductive nature of evil, the horror of war, and human malevolence is essential reading for anyone who contemplates the depths of human experience.

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The Kindly Ones, Jonathan Littell

Idioma
Publicado en
2009
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Idioma
Inglés
Publicado en
2009
Formato
Tapa blanda
ISBN10
0701181664
ISBN13
9780701181666
Serie
Primera publicación
2006
Título original
Les Bienveillantes
Calificación
4,1 de 5
Descripción
This Faustian tale unfolds as the fictional memoir of Dr. Max Aue, a former SS intelligence officer who has reinvented himself as a family man and lace factory owner in post-war France. An intellectual immersed in philosophy, literature, and classical music, Max is also a cold-blooded assassin and a meticulous bureaucrat. He recounts his life with chilling clarity, reflecting on his disrupted childhood, pivotal student experiences, and his involvement in Nazi atrocities across the Eastern Front, from Poland to the Caucasus. Present during the siege of Stalingrad and the death camps, he ultimately witnesses the chaotic downfall of the Nazis and Berlin. While Max is a fictional character, he interacts with historical figures like Eichmann, Himmler, and Hitler. This expansive, intense narrative is both hallucinatory and compelling, earning it the designation of a 'monument of contemporary literature' by Le Figaro. It has drawn comparisons to literary classics such as War and Peace. This profound exploration of the seductive nature of evil, the horror of war, and human malevolence is essential reading for anyone who contemplates the depths of human experience.